WO2006054885A1 - Push belt and manufacturing method therefor - Google Patents

Push belt and manufacturing method therefor Download PDF

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Publication number
WO2006054885A1
WO2006054885A1 PCT/NL2004/000774 NL2004000774W WO2006054885A1 WO 2006054885 A1 WO2006054885 A1 WO 2006054885A1 NL 2004000774 W NL2004000774 W NL 2004000774W WO 2006054885 A1 WO2006054885 A1 WO 2006054885A1
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WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
rings
tensile means
endless tensile
manufacturing
ring
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/NL2004/000774
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Cornelia Adriana Elizabeth Crebolder
Minh Duc Tran
Bert Pennings
Original Assignee
Robert Bosch Gmbh
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Robert Bosch Gmbh filed Critical Robert Bosch Gmbh
Priority to PCT/NL2004/000774 priority Critical patent/WO2006054885A1/en
Priority to AT04800166T priority patent/ATE541142T1/en
Priority to EP04800166A priority patent/EP1815160B1/en
Priority to CN2004800444219A priority patent/CN101061329B/en
Priority to JP2007541117A priority patent/JP4981679B2/en
Publication of WO2006054885A1 publication Critical patent/WO2006054885A1/en

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Classifications

    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F16ENGINEERING ELEMENTS AND UNITS; GENERAL MEASURES FOR PRODUCING AND MAINTAINING EFFECTIVE FUNCTIONING OF MACHINES OR INSTALLATIONS; THERMAL INSULATION IN GENERAL
    • F16GBELTS, CABLES, OR ROPES, PREDOMINANTLY USED FOR DRIVING PURPOSES; CHAINS; FITTINGS PREDOMINANTLY USED THEREFOR
    • F16G5/00V-belts, i.e. belts of tapered cross-section
    • F16G5/16V-belts, i.e. belts of tapered cross-section consisting of several parts

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to a manufacturing method for push belts, as defined by the preamble of the following claim 1 , and to the product derived thereby.
  • the push belt is mainly used as the means for power transmission between two adjustable pulleys of the well-known continuously variable transmission that is mainly applied in motor vehicles.
  • Such push belts are generally known and are composed of a multitude of relatively thin transverse metal elements that are slidably incorporated on one or more laminated endless tensile means that are each composed of a set of mutually nested flat metal rings, alternatively denoted bands.
  • Such rings are produced from steel, such as maraging steel, that combines a/o the properties of great tensile strength and good resistance against tensile stress and bending fatigue with a relatively favourable possibility to process the steel from sheet material towards the desired shape and material characteristics of the end-product rings, which, preferably, should not vary along the circumference of the rings.
  • These desired material characteristics comprise a fair hardness of the ring core material for combining the properties of a great tensile strength together with sufficient elasticity to allow longitudinal bending of the ring and an extremely hard outer surface layer of the ring to provide wear resistance.
  • the outer surface layer is also provided with an residual compressive stress to provide a high resistance against metal fatigue, which is a significant feature of the rings because of the numerous number of load and bending cycles the rings are subjected to during the service lifetime of the belt.
  • the rings themselves are formed out of a sheet base material, which is bent and welded into a cylindrical shape, or tube, which is heat treated, i.e. annealed, to restore the original material properties, i.e. to largely remove changes therein that were introduced by the bending and welding.
  • the tube is than cut into a number of hoops, which are subsequently rolled and elongated to a required thickness, which is typically about 0.185 ⁇ m in the end product. After rolling the hoops are usually referred to as rings or bands.
  • the rings are subjected to a further annealing step to remove the internal stresses introduced during rolling. Thereafter, the rings are calibrated, i.e. they are mounted around two rotating rollers and stretched to a predefined circumference length.
  • a tensile means is formed by radially nesting, i.e. placing essentially concentrically, a number of purposely selected rings, whereby only a small positive or negative play is allowed between adjacent rings of the tensile means.
  • ring play may be conveniently defined as the circumference length of a radially inwardly oriented main face of the radially outer ring of a pair of adjacent rings, minus the circumference length of a radially outwardly oriented main face of the radially inner ring of such pair.
  • the thus defined ring play varies between a couple of microns negative play to about 10 microns or so of positive play for a typical ring circumference length in the range of about 500 to 1000 mm.
  • the circumference length or another representative dimensional parameter(s) of each processed ring is measured and the rings are stocked classified by such parameter(s). From such stock of classified rings, a number of suitably dimensioned rings are selected and nested concentrically to form the endless tensile means, e.g. with 9 or 12 rings, while satisfying a predefined allowed ring play between the rings of all of the pairs of adjacent rings in the endless tensile means.
  • ring measuring and selecting and tensile means assembly The endless tensile means is than ready for assembly into a belt, i.e. ready for being combined with the transverse elements.
  • One example of such optimisation is provided by the non-prepublished International patent application PCT/NL04/000357, in which it is proposed to perform the process steps of ageing and nitriding simultaneous, i.e. in the same furnace, by applying a base material that is suitable therefor.
  • the present invention realises such general object of optimisation of the tensile means manufacturing method in a different manner, i.e. by assembling the endless tensile means immediately after the process step of ring calibration and thus performing the subsequent process steps of ageing and nitriding on the tensile means as a whole.
  • the present invention overcomes a wide spread prejudice that for decades has prevented the artisan from applying the above-described manufacturing method.
  • a free flow of the medium for nitriding e.g. gaseous NH3 and N2 around an object to be nitrided should be allowed for a uniform and reproducible case hardening result, in particular a mutual contact of the objects to be nitrided should be avoided in any case.
  • the medium for nitriding e.g. gaseous NH3 and N2
  • a further dissuading circumstance is the change in circumference length of the rings that is known to -unavoidably- occur during the various heat treatments. Such change may vary between the individual rings in the endless tensile means and thus disadvantageously influences the ring play between the adjacent rings. Therefore it has been the long-standing practice to first complete the heat treatment process steps in the ring manufacturing and to measure, select and radially nest the rings to form the endless tensile means only thereafter. According to the present invention, however, it appeared that the changes in circumference length might be reliably compensated for in advance when the endless tensile means is assembled, by concentrically stacking the rings with an appropriately defined ring play. Moreover, in a further elaboration of the invention below, these naturally occurring changes are, surprisingly, even exploited to improve the service lifetime of the belt.
  • JP- 2001-329317 thus deters the artisan from heat treating the endless tensile means as a whole, by implying that a considerable radial gap between the rings thereof is required for properly performing any heat treating process such as annealing, hardening or nitriding.
  • the ring calibration process is preferably set-up such that the individual rings are stretched to a well defined circumference length, which is, however, made to change from one ring to the other.
  • the rings that are subsequently calibrated can be immediately placed concentrically around one another, i.e. radially nested, while satisfying the said predefined ring play there between, to form the endless tensile means.
  • the process step of ring measuring and selecting may be obviated and the complexity of the overall manufacturing method is thus favourably reduced and its efficiency significantly improved.
  • the present invention allows and proposes the use of a conveyer for the continuous transport of endless tensile means through the nitriding and/or ageing furnace(s).
  • Such conveyer preferably comprises a discontinuous carrier means, such as a continuous mesh, a perforated belt or an array of cylindrical rollers, to allow the nitriding atmosphere to reaching the underside of the endless tensile means that is freely placed thereon.
  • figure 1 figuratively represents the known manufacturing method
  • figure 3 illustrates in a cross-section an endless tensile means composed of a number of rings adapted to and manufactured by the manufacturing method according to the present invention.
  • FIG. 1 illustrates the presently relevant part of the known manufacturing method as is practised since the early years of metal push belt production.
  • a sheet of base material 1 is bent into a cylindrical shape, whereby the sheet ends 2 that meet each other are welded together in a second process step Il to form a tube 3.
  • a third step III of the process the tube 3 is annealed.
  • the tube 3 is cut into a number of hoops 4, which are subsequently -process step five V- rolled and elongated to a required thickness, which is typically about 0.185 mm in the end product. After rolling the hoops 4 are usually referred to as rings 4.
  • the rings 4 are subjected to a further annealing process step Vl to remove the internal stresses introduced during rolling. Thereafter, in a seventh process step VII, the rings 4 are calibrated, i.e. they are mounted around two rotating rollers and stretched to a predefined circumference length. In this seventh process step VII, also an internal stress distribution is imposed on the rings 4, which defines the so-called curling radius of the respective ring 4. In the eighth step VIII of the known process the rings 4 undergo two heat treatments, either subsequently or simultaneously. Firstly, the rings 4 are precipitation hardened, i.e.
  • process step VIII-A aged, in a nitrogen-atmosphere
  • process step VIII-B the rings 4 are nitrided in a nitrogen- and ammonia- atmosphere
  • This latter treatment VIII- B is known as a gas soft nitriding process and provides a case hardening of the rings 4, whereby a diffusion nitrided surface layer of typically 25-35 microns of extreme hardness is formed.
  • a tensile means 5 is formed by radially stacking, i.e. nesting, a number of purposely selected rings 4.
  • a representative dimension of each processed ring 4 e.g. its circumference length, is measured in a ninth process step IX, whereby the rings 4 are stocked classified by such length.
  • the endless tensile means 5 is assembled by radially nesting a number of suitably dimensioned rings 4 from such stock of classified rings 4.
  • this known method of figure 1 may be significantly simplified, which simplified new manufacturing method is figuratively illustrated in figure 2.
  • the endless tensile means 5 is assembled by radially nesting a desired number of rings 4 of suitable circumference length in an intermediate process step VII* immediately after the seventh process step VII of ring calibration, whereby the preceding process step I-VI may be executed in the above-discussed conventional manner.
  • This new, intermediate process step VII* thus replaces the former tenth process step X and results in the eighth process step VIII the said heat treatments of ageing (process step VIII-A) and nitriding (process step VIII-B) being performed on the endless tensile means 5 as a whole.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Solid-Phase Diffusion Into Metallic Material Surfaces (AREA)
  • Heat Treatment Of Articles (AREA)
  • Transmissions By Endless Flexible Members (AREA)

Abstract

The invention provides for a method for manufacturing a push belt for a continuously variable transmission composed of a multitude of relatively thin transverse metal elements that are slidably incorporated on one or more laminated endless tensile means (5) that are each composed of a set of mutually nested flat metal rings (4). The method according to the invention comprises a step (VII*) of assembling the endless tensile means (5) from a number of previously calibrated metal rings (4) and a subsequent step (VIII-N) of nitriding the endless tensile means (5) as a whole.

Description

PUSH BELT AND MANUFACTURING METHOD THEREFOR
The present invention relates to a manufacturing method for push belts, as defined by the preamble of the following claim 1 , and to the product derived thereby. The push belt is mainly used as the means for power transmission between two adjustable pulleys of the well-known continuously variable transmission that is mainly applied in motor vehicles.
Such push belts are generally known and are composed of a multitude of relatively thin transverse metal elements that are slidably incorporated on one or more laminated endless tensile means that are each composed of a set of mutually nested flat metal rings, alternatively denoted bands. Such rings are produced from steel, such as maraging steel, that combines a/o the properties of great tensile strength and good resistance against tensile stress and bending fatigue with a relatively favourable possibility to process the steel from sheet material towards the desired shape and material characteristics of the end-product rings, which, preferably, should not vary along the circumference of the rings.
These desired material characteristics comprise a fair hardness of the ring core material for combining the properties of a great tensile strength together with sufficient elasticity to allow longitudinal bending of the ring and an extremely hard outer surface layer of the ring to provide wear resistance. Preferably, the outer surface layer is also provided with an residual compressive stress to provide a high resistance against metal fatigue, which is a significant feature of the rings because of the numerous number of load and bending cycles the rings are subjected to during the service lifetime of the belt. The process steps of the general manufacturing method for such belts, at least for the tensile means thereof, as applied by Applicant for several decades now, have become well known in the art.
The rings themselves are formed out of a sheet base material, which is bent and welded into a cylindrical shape, or tube, which is heat treated, i.e. annealed, to restore the original material properties, i.e. to largely remove changes therein that were introduced by the bending and welding. The tube is than cut into a number of hoops, which are subsequently rolled and elongated to a required thickness, which is typically about 0.185 μm in the end product. After rolling the hoops are usually referred to as rings or bands. The rings are subjected to a further annealing step to remove the internal stresses introduced during rolling. Thereafter, the rings are calibrated, i.e. they are mounted around two rotating rollers and stretched to a predefined circumference length. In this process step, also an internal stress distribution is imposed on the rings, which a/o defines the so-called curling radius of the ring as is explained in detail in the European patent application EP-A-1 403 551. Finally, the rings are precipitation hardened, i.e. aged, in a nitrogen-atmosphere and gas nitrided in a nitrogen- and ammonia-atmosphere, to provide additional hardness, as well as a compressive stress to the outer surface layer of the rings, which latter process step is alternatively denoted "case hardening".
From a number of these processed rings a tensile means is formed by radially nesting, i.e. placing essentially concentrically, a number of purposely selected rings, whereby only a small positive or negative play is allowed between adjacent rings of the tensile means. Hereby, such ring play may be conveniently defined as the circumference length of a radially inwardly oriented main face of the radially outer ring of a pair of adjacent rings, minus the circumference length of a radially outwardly oriented main face of the radially inner ring of such pair. Typically, the thus defined ring play varies between a couple of microns negative play to about 10 microns or so of positive play for a typical ring circumference length in the range of about 500 to 1000 mm.
To obtain the required number of rings suited for forming one tensile means, the circumference length or another representative dimensional parameter(s) of each processed ring is measured and the rings are stocked classified by such parameter(s). From such stock of classified rings, a number of suitably dimensioned rings are selected and nested concentrically to form the endless tensile means, e.g. with 9 or 12 rings, while satisfying a predefined allowed ring play between the rings of all of the pairs of adjacent rings in the endless tensile means. These latter steps in the belt manufacturing process are referred to as ring measuring and selecting and tensile means assembly. The endless tensile means is than ready for assembly into a belt, i.e. ready for being combined with the transverse elements.
It is an object of the present invention to optimise the present, long standing practice for attaining a tensile means for a push belt. One example of such optimisation is provided by the non-prepublished International patent application PCT/NL04/000357, in which it is proposed to perform the process steps of ageing and nitriding simultaneous, i.e. in the same furnace, by applying a base material that is suitable therefor. The present invention, however, realises such general object of optimisation of the tensile means manufacturing method in a different manner, i.e. by assembling the endless tensile means immediately after the process step of ring calibration and thus performing the subsequent process steps of ageing and nitriding on the tensile means as a whole. The main improvement of this new manufacturing method being a dramatic increase of the capacity of the ageing and nitriding processes, because the endless tensile means that is composed of several (usually 9 to 12) rings requires only about the same (furnace) space as one single ring.
By doing so, the present invention overcomes a wide spread prejudice that for decades has prevented the artisan from applying the above-described manufacturing method. According to this prejudice, a free flow of the medium for nitriding (e.g. gaseous NH3 and N2) around an object to be nitrided should be allowed for a uniform and reproducible case hardening result, in particular a mutual contact of the objects to be nitrided should be avoided in any case. In the present case of ring nitriding, it may indeed be considered essential that all surface parts of the rings are effectively and equally treated to avoid weaker, less hardened spots and, consequently, the presently proposed measure has always been declined in advance.
A further dissuading circumstance is the change in circumference length of the rings that is known to -unavoidably- occur during the various heat treatments. Such change may vary between the individual rings in the endless tensile means and thus disadvantageously influences the ring play between the adjacent rings. Therefore it has been the long-standing practice to first complete the heat treatment process steps in the ring manufacturing and to measure, select and radially nest the rings to form the endless tensile means only thereafter. According to the present invention, however, it appeared that the changes in circumference length might be reliably compensated for in advance when the endless tensile means is assembled, by concentrically stacking the rings with an appropriately defined ring play. Moreover, in a further elaboration of the invention below, these naturally occurring changes are, surprisingly, even exploited to improve the service lifetime of the belt.
During the past decades, it has for either one or for both of the above reasons apparently been conceived that it is a prerequisite to manufacture belts, i.e. the endless tensile means thereof, departing from rings that are measured and selected for this purposes only after they have been subjected to all of the required process steps, including the heat treatments of ageing and nitriding. This prejudice is illustrated by the fact that, according to Applicant's knowledge, all belt manufacturers apply this latter conventional method even though the advantages of the presently claimed method are immediately obvious.
An arbitrary example of the existing practice and belief is provided by the Japanese publication JP-2001-329317, which discloses a ring heat treatment process, in particular, a ring carrying tray to be used in such process. Although each such tray is loaded by two, mutually concentrically arranged rings, the latter are not adjacent rings of the endless tensile means. In fact mutual contact is avoided, by combining two rings of sufficiently differing diameter, e.g. ring numbers 1 and 7 of an endless tensile means composed of 12 rings, thus leaving out the five ring numbers 2 to 6 that would be present between rings 1 and 7 in the final endless tensile means. Accordingly, a large radial gap is created between the rings that are loaded on the same tray, which gap amounts to more than five times the thickness of the ring. JP- 2001-329317 thus deters the artisan from heat treating the endless tensile means as a whole, by implying that a considerable radial gap between the rings thereof is required for properly performing any heat treating process such as annealing, hardening or nitriding.
In the new manufacturing process according to the invention, the ring calibration process is preferably set-up such that the individual rings are stretched to a well defined circumference length, which is, however, made to change from one ring to the other. Preferably, in such a manner that the rings that are subsequently calibrated can be immediately placed concentrically around one another, i.e. radially nested, while satisfying the said predefined ring play there between, to form the endless tensile means. Hereby, the process step of ring measuring and selecting may be obviated and the complexity of the overall manufacturing method is thus favourably reduced and its efficiency significantly improved. The results of experiments with endless tensile means composed of 12 rings -a commonly found maximum in number of rings per package-, wherein the process settings such as furnace temperature and atmospheric compositions were maintained identical to the conventional process wherein the rings are treated individually, show only a small reduction of the hardness of and nitride concentration in the ring faces facing the inside of the endless tensile means, i.e. facing another, adjacent ring -denoted the inside faces of the endless tensile means-, whereas those ring faces that face radially outward from the endless tensile means -denoted the outside faces of the endless tensile means- remained unchanged. Also the depth of the resulting nitride layer was found to be essentially equal to that of individually treated rings. Finally, it was observed that the circumference length of the radially innermost and outermost rings of the endless tensile means expanded somewhat relative to the in-between rings.
In relation to the hardness reduction of the inside faces it is remarked that such has been found to be entirely acceptable. Where before the ring surface hardness was determined with a view to wear in the ring to element contact, such hardness was automatically set as a standard for each of the rings in the endless tensile means. Given the nature of the known manufacturing method, all rings are subjected to the same process steps and the same process settings. However, it is now conceived that as long as the surface hardness of mutually contacting ring faces in the endless tensile means, i.e. the inside faces, are to a large extend comparable, which is the case with the manufacturing method according to the present invention, a considerably lower hardness level can be accepted in the ring to ring contact, while maintaining an acceptable wear resistance. For this reason the present invention in fact is also considered to be the invention of a push belt whereof the hardness of the outside ring surfaces that contact and interact with the transverse element of the belt is greater than that of the inside ring surfaces that contact each other.
In relation to the slight length-wise expansion of the radially innermost and outermost rings of the endless tensile means relative to the in-between rings, it is remarked that such may be compensated for beforehand, by an appropriate adaptation of the said predefined ring play. In practice this would result in a pre¬ defined ring play between the innermost ring and the immediately adjacent one that is slightly increased relative to the play between the inside rings of the endless tensile means and a pre-defined ring play between the outermost ring and the immediately adjacent one that is slightly decreased relative thereto. Numerically speaking such relative expansion of the radially innermost and outermost rings amounts to about 0.002 - 0.02% of their respective circumference length.
It is, however, also remarked that the particular differences in length-wise expansion obtained with the manufacturing method according to the invention, in fact represent a surprisingly favourable manner of realising a belt with relatively increased service lifetime of the endless tensile means component thereof, for the reasons set out in the European patent application EP-A-1 216 366 in the name of Applicant. It may thus also be opted not to adapt the predefined ring play between pair of adjacent rings, but rather to apply constant, appropriately defined play between the adjacent rings in the endless tensile means. Further it is remarked that before, in the conventional ageing and nitriding processes, the rings are individually mounted in an oven rack (see e.g. JP-2001- 329317) in order to effectively use of the furnace and also because otherwise the rings could be easily damaged by contacting other rings and/or furnace walls. The rings thus have to be handled quite extensively and delicately and, moreover, are processed semi-batchwise. The present invention, however, allows and proposes the use of a conveyer for the continuous transport of endless tensile means through the nitriding and/or ageing furnace(s). Such conveyer preferably comprises a discontinuous carrier means, such as a continuous mesh, a perforated belt or an array of cylindrical rollers, to allow the nitriding atmosphere to reaching the underside of the endless tensile means that is freely placed thereon. According to the invention, such new handling method becomes possible, because the endless tensile means is considerably more robust compared to an individual ring and because by applying the manufacturing method according to the invention, the heat treatments of ageing and nitriding are performed much more effectively anyway. The above-described basic features of the invention will now be elucidated by way of example, along a drawing in which: figure 1 figuratively represents the known manufacturing method; figure 2 in a corresponding manner represents the optimised, new manufacturing method in accordance with the invention; and figure 3 illustrates in a cross-section an endless tensile means composed of a number of rings adapted to and manufactured by the manufacturing method according to the present invention.
In the drawings, the separate process steps of the known and the new manufacturing method are indicated by way of Roman numerals. Figure 1 illustrates the presently relevant part of the known manufacturing method as is practised since the early years of metal push belt production. In a first process step I a sheet of base material 1 is bent into a cylindrical shape, whereby the sheet ends 2 that meet each other are welded together in a second process step Il to form a tube 3. In a third step III of the process the tube 3 is annealed. Thereafter, in a fourth process step IV the tube 3 is cut into a number of hoops 4, which are subsequently -process step five V- rolled and elongated to a required thickness, which is typically about 0.185 mm in the end product. After rolling the hoops 4 are usually referred to as rings 4.
The rings 4 are subjected to a further annealing process step Vl to remove the internal stresses introduced during rolling. Thereafter, in a seventh process step VII, the rings 4 are calibrated, i.e. they are mounted around two rotating rollers and stretched to a predefined circumference length. In this seventh process step VII, also an internal stress distribution is imposed on the rings 4, which defines the so-called curling radius of the respective ring 4. In the eighth step VIII of the known process the rings 4 undergo two heat treatments, either subsequently or simultaneously. Firstly, the rings 4 are precipitation hardened, i.e. aged, in a nitrogen-atmosphere (process step VIII-A) and, secondly, the rings 4 are nitrided in a nitrogen- and ammonia- atmosphere (process step VIII-B), to provide additional hardness, as well as a compressive stress to the outer surface layer of the rings 4. This latter treatment VIII- B is known as a gas soft nitriding process and provides a case hardening of the rings 4, whereby a diffusion nitrided surface layer of typically 25-35 microns of extreme hardness is formed.
From a number of these processed rings 4 a tensile means 5 is formed by radially stacking, i.e. nesting, a number of purposely selected rings 4. To obtain the required number of rings 4 suited for forming one tensile means 5, a representative dimension of each processed ring 4, e.g. its circumference length, is measured in a ninth process step IX, whereby the rings 4 are stocked classified by such length. Subsequently, in a tenth and final process step X the endless tensile means 5 is assembled by radially nesting a number of suitably dimensioned rings 4 from such stock of classified rings 4.
Now according to the invention this known method of figure 1 may be significantly simplified, which simplified new manufacturing method is figuratively illustrated in figure 2. In the manufacturing method according to the present invention, the endless tensile means 5 is assembled by radially nesting a desired number of rings 4 of suitable circumference length in an intermediate process step VII* immediately after the seventh process step VII of ring calibration, whereby the preceding process step I-VI may be executed in the above-discussed conventional manner. This new, intermediate process step VII* thus replaces the former tenth process step X and results in the eighth process step VIII the said heat treatments of ageing (process step VIII-A) and nitriding (process step VIII-B) being performed on the endless tensile means 5 as a whole.
The main improvement of this new manufacturing method being a dramatic increase of the capacity of the ageing and nitriding processes, because the endless tensile means 5 that is composed of several (usually 9 to 12) rings 4 requires only about the same (furnace) space as one single ring 4. Moreover, the ring calibration process VII may be arranged and performed such that the rings 4 are accurately stretched to a specific circumference length, which is defined such that each subsequently calibrated ring 4 may be used either to start a new endless tensile means 5 to be assembled, or to add it to an already partially completed endless tensile means 5. Hereby, also the process step of ring measuring and selecting (former process step IX) favourably becomes superfluous.
It is hypothesised that a slightly convex cross sectional shape of the rings 4 such that they are at least effectively barrel shaped, which convex shape is generally applied in push belts of current design, is at least partly responsible for the surprising experimental results that are the basis of the present invention. Inter alia, such barrel shape and the dimensions and function thereof are described in the European patent application EP-A-O 950 830 and is illustrated here in figure 3.
From figure 3 it appears that when a ring 4a of the endless tensile means 5 is not positioned exactly concentrically relative to an adjacent ring 4b, or when a ring 4 is deformed relative to an adjacent ring 4 (e.g. shaped less circular, i.e. elliptically), such adjacent rings 4a, 4b may contact, thereby preventing, or at least impeding, the nitriding atmosphere from reaching the contact area 6. However, in case of effectively barrel-shaped rings 4, i.e. rings 4 in a longitudinal cross section having a centrally located section that is thicker than lateral end sections thereof, such contact area 6 remains very limited and in essence only point contact is created between the rings 4a, 4b. Apparently such limited contact area 6 allows a sufficient supply of fresh nitriding gas to the outer surfaces of the rings 4a, 4b during the nitriding heat treatment and thus provides a proper nitriding thereof.

Claims

1. Method for manufacturing a push belt for a continuously variable transmission composed of a multitude of relatively thin transverse metal elements that are slidably incorporated on one or more laminated endless tensile means (5) that are each composed of a set of mutually nested flat metal rings (4), characterised in that, the method comprises the process step (VIII-N) of heat treating the endless tensile means (5) in an atmosphere containing gaseous ammonia (NH3).
2. Manufacturing method according to claim 1 , characterised in that, the rings (4) are made from a maraging steel and the method further comprises the process step (VIII-A) of ageing the endless tensile means (5) in an atmosphere containing nitrogen (N2), which process step (VIII-A) is preferably performed simultaneously with the process step (VIII-N) of nitriding.
3. Manufacturing method according to claim 1 or 2, characterised in that, in a preceding process step (VII, VII*) the individual rings (4) of the endless tensile means (5) are sequentially calibrated towards a predefined circumference length and, thereafter, are placed mutually essentially concentrically to form the endless tensile means (5).
4. Manufacturing method according to claim 3, characterised in that, a ring play is defined between the rings (4) of a pair of adjacent rings (4) in the endless tensile means (5) and in that in the preceding process step (VII, VII*) the said predefined circumference length increases, respectively decreases, stepwise by an essentially constant amount for subsequent pairs of rings (4) of the endless tensile means (5), whereby the ring play is essentially the same for all pairs of adjacent rings (4) in the endless tensile means (5).
5. Manufacturing method according to claim 3, characterised in that, a ring play is defined between the rings (4) of a pair of adjacent rings (4) in the endless tensile means (5) and in that in the preceding process step (VII, VII*) the said predefined circumference length are set such that the ring play between the innermost of the pairs of rings (4) of the endless tensile means (5) is larger and/or that the ring play between the outermost of the pairs of rings (4) of the endless tensile means (5) is smaller relative to ring play between the other pairs of adjacent rings (4) in the endless tensile means (5).
6. Manufacturing method according to any of the preceding claims, characterised in that, at least one of a radially inwardly oriented main face and a radially outwardly oriented main face of the rings (4) of the endless tensile means (5) in a longitudinal cross-section is shaped effectively and at least slightly convex.
7. Manufacturing method according to any of the preceding claims, characterised in that, the endless tensile means (5) is continuously transported through a nitriding furnace on a conveyer.
8. Push belt for a continuously variable transmission, in particular produced by the manufacturing method according to any of the preceding claims, composed of a multitude of relatively thin transverse metal elements that are slidably incorporated on one or more laminated endless tensile means (5) that are each composed of a set of mutually nested flat metal rings (4), characterised in that, the surface hardness of the radially inwardly oriented main face of the innermost ring (4) of the endless tensile means (5) and the surface hardness of the radially outwardly oriented main face of the outermost ring (4) of the endless tensile means (5) is set to a significantly higher level than that of the radially oriented main faces of the other, in-between rings (4) of the endless tensile means (5).
PCT/NL2004/000774 2004-11-17 2004-11-17 Push belt and manufacturing method therefor WO2006054885A1 (en)

Priority Applications (5)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
PCT/NL2004/000774 WO2006054885A1 (en) 2004-11-17 2004-11-17 Push belt and manufacturing method therefor
AT04800166T ATE541142T1 (en) 2004-11-17 2004-11-17 PULL BELT AND PRODUCTION METHOD THEREOF
EP04800166A EP1815160B1 (en) 2004-11-17 2004-11-17 Push belt and manufacturing method therefor
CN2004800444219A CN101061329B (en) 2004-11-17 2004-11-17 Push belt and making method therefor
JP2007541117A JP4981679B2 (en) 2004-11-17 2004-11-17 Push belt and its manufacturing method

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
PCT/NL2004/000774 WO2006054885A1 (en) 2004-11-17 2004-11-17 Push belt and manufacturing method therefor

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WO2006054885A1 true WO2006054885A1 (en) 2006-05-26

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WO2009134119A1 (en) * 2008-04-28 2009-11-05 Robert Bosch Gmbh Drive belt ring component and manufacturing method and maraging steel base material therefor
WO2009132689A1 (en) * 2008-04-28 2009-11-05 Robert Bosch Gmbh Manufacturing method for a drive belt ring component
WO2010002240A1 (en) * 2008-06-30 2010-01-07 Robert Bosch Gmbh Heat treatment process for a drive belt metal ring component
NL1037364C2 (en) * 2009-10-06 2011-04-07 Bosch Gmbh Robert Drive belt provided with a laminated set of steel rings.
US8815020B2 (en) 2009-12-25 2014-08-26 Toyota Jidosha Kabushiki Kaisha Method of manufacturing a laminar ring
JP2014176900A (en) * 2014-03-18 2014-09-25 Robert Bosch Gmbh Method of manufacturing ring component of drive belt
US9266208B2 (en) 2011-02-14 2016-02-23 Honda Motor Co., Ltd. Metal ring manufacture method and metal ring manufacture device
EP2891819A4 (en) * 2012-08-31 2016-03-30 Toyota Motor Co Ltd Method for manufacturing endless metal belt, endless metal belt, and belt-type continuously variable transmission

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JP4687924B2 (en) * 2008-01-18 2011-05-25 トヨタ自動車株式会社 Manufacturing method of ring member
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US20160045948A1 (en) * 2013-04-08 2016-02-18 Toyota Jidosha Kabushiki Kaisha Method of manufacturing cvt belt
NL1040571C2 (en) * 2013-12-24 2015-06-26 Bosch Gmbh Robert Metal ring component for a drive belt for a continuously variable transmission.
NL1040568C2 (en) * 2013-12-24 2015-06-26 Bosch Gmbh Robert Method for measuring a fatigue property of a source material for an endless, flexible metal band of a drive belt.
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JP2018054081A (en) * 2016-09-30 2018-04-05 アイシン・エィ・ダブリュ株式会社 Ring manufacturing method
WO2022128046A1 (en) 2020-12-20 2022-06-23 Robert Bosch Gmbh Ring circumference length calibration process in a manufacturing method of a ring set for a drive belt
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Cited By (17)

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WO2007145502A1 (en) * 2006-06-12 2007-12-21 Robert Bosch Gmbh Manufacturing method for making thin metal rings
EP1939488A1 (en) * 2006-12-28 2008-07-02 Robert Bosch Gmbh Method for processing a metal band, a continuous metal band and pushbelt in which the metal band is used
WO2008080910A1 (en) * 2006-12-28 2008-07-10 Robert Bosch Gmbh Method for processing a metal band, a continuous metal band and pushbelt in which the metal band is used
CN103277457B (en) * 2006-12-28 2016-06-01 罗伯特·博世有限公司 For the treatment of the method for metal band, continuous metal band and the pushing belt employing this metal band
CN103277457A (en) * 2006-12-28 2013-09-04 罗伯特·博世有限公司 Method for processing a metal band, a continuous metal band and pushbelt in which the metal band is used
JP2011518672A (en) * 2008-04-28 2011-06-30 ローベルト ボツシユ ゲゼルシヤフト ミツト ベシユレンクテル ハフツング Method for manufacturing ring component of drive belt
WO2009132689A1 (en) * 2008-04-28 2009-11-05 Robert Bosch Gmbh Manufacturing method for a drive belt ring component
WO2009134119A1 (en) * 2008-04-28 2009-11-05 Robert Bosch Gmbh Drive belt ring component and manufacturing method and maraging steel base material therefor
WO2010002240A1 (en) * 2008-06-30 2010-01-07 Robert Bosch Gmbh Heat treatment process for a drive belt metal ring component
NL1037364C2 (en) * 2009-10-06 2011-04-07 Bosch Gmbh Robert Drive belt provided with a laminated set of steel rings.
WO2011043648A1 (en) * 2009-10-06 2011-04-14 Robert Bosch Gmbh Drive belt provided with a laminated set of steel rings
KR101802539B1 (en) 2009-10-06 2017-11-28 로베르트 보쉬 게엠베하 Drive belt provided with a laminated set of steel rings
US8815020B2 (en) 2009-12-25 2014-08-26 Toyota Jidosha Kabushiki Kaisha Method of manufacturing a laminar ring
US9266208B2 (en) 2011-02-14 2016-02-23 Honda Motor Co., Ltd. Metal ring manufacture method and metal ring manufacture device
EP2891819A4 (en) * 2012-08-31 2016-03-30 Toyota Motor Co Ltd Method for manufacturing endless metal belt, endless metal belt, and belt-type continuously variable transmission
US9982749B2 (en) 2012-08-31 2018-05-29 Toyota Jidosha Kabushiki Kaisha Method for manufacturing endless metal belt, endless metal belt, and belt-type continuously variable transmission
JP2014176900A (en) * 2014-03-18 2014-09-25 Robert Bosch Gmbh Method of manufacturing ring component of drive belt

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CN101061329A (en) 2007-10-24
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ATE541142T1 (en) 2012-01-15
CN101061329B (en) 2010-08-11
EP1815160A1 (en) 2007-08-08
JP2008520437A (en) 2008-06-19

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